ref. fra
THE BOOK FROM LIFE ON 
              OLD ATLANTIS- part2ref.
On atl.they had a real insigh into 
              the psycic world and the meaning of the thought, and understanding 
              that everything is vibration:
"study will show thee that the 
              laws of the physical world continue inward to their spiritual 
              source; that they are, truly, but prolongations the one of the 
              other. But entering into the realm of vibration, whose doorkeeper 
              is sound, we find that the One Substance vibrates in variant, but 
              definite, dynamic degree, and that thence arise each and all of 
              the diverse forms of matter; in short, the difference between any 
              given substances, as gold and silver, iron and lead, sugar and 
              sand, is not one of matter, but of dynamic degree 
              solely".
              
-*-
              
The Poseidi(Atlanis-people) 
              found that in the realm beyond magnetism were yet other forces, 
              superior and more intense of pulsation, forces operated by the 
              mind. And Mind is of our Father, and is the constantly creating 
              source of all things whatsoever. 
              
*
The Poseid investigator 
              thus knew of wondrous forces of nature which he might bend to the 
              uses of mankind. The secret was that attraction of gravitation, 
              the law of weight, had set over against it the "repulsion by 
              levitation"; that the first belonged to the Light-Side of Nature, 
              and the second to Navaz, the Night-Side; that vibration governed 
              the darkness and the cold.
               
*
"this wisdom Atlantis 
              found it possible to adjust weight (positiveness) to lack of 
              weight (negativeness) - This achievement meant much. It meant 
              aerial navigation without wings or unwieldy gas-reservoirs, 
              through taking advantage of repulsion by levitation opposed in 
              overmatching strength to the attraction of gravitation"
              
*
In Poseid no wires or other 
              sensible material connection was required in the use of either 
              telephones or telephotes nor heat-conduction.
(as also Tesla 
              understood, but he was stopped in his development by the 
              money-people already then for a century ago. rø.rem).
              
*
book also touch the 
              measure-system used in atl.but I do not enter into that 
              here.
*
"The fact that students were often hard pressed 
              for means on which to live - was taken into account by the 
              government, which in all of its dealings with this class allowed 
              better terms than were accorded to any other social 
              division.
              
*
the person telling this 
              atl.story whos name then was "Zailm Numinos" had first been living 
              rual, on/near the mountains, but then later moved nearer the city 
              for the study-period.
              
*
It was customary with all 
              newcomers in the city to make a visit to the Agacoe palace and 
              gardens early as might be convenient after their arrival. Two 
              hours in each week the Rai (emperor) sat in the reception hall, 
              and during these two hours visitors thronged the corridors and 
              passed in double ranks before the throne. After this ceremony, all 
              who chore(m.kjedelig, rutine-arbeide) were free to wander 
              unrestricted through the gardens, visit the menagerie, where every 
              known species of animal was kept, or to go through the grand 
              museum or the royal library. With many it was a pleasurable custom 
              frequently to spend the day at Agacoe, on which occasions lunches 
              were brought and a quiet picnic held under the great trees beside 
              fountain, lake or cataract.
              
*
he also talk about an 
              advanced kind of surveillance eq./camera or like he saw in the 
              city he came to - not seemingly known by him 
              beforehand.
*
When he came to the city he was able to 
              ride in the transport-system and saw surroundings so 
              beatiful:
"...And this was a marriage of art and of science; 
              from their union sprang the fair dream, a triumph of human skill 
              and knowledge"
(here again is it suitable to insert the 
              description and artist-drawing from the DAMANHUR-people making 
              this timetravel to the Atl-port, where a similar unbeliveable 
              artistic architecture was described).
"In every 
              direction cars/carridges were coming, going, or at rest, 
              containing people dressed as for a gala day, the various 
              distinguishing colors of their turbans denoting their social rank. 
              Poseid, like other countries then and since, had its social 
              castes, as the governmental, the literati and ecclesiastics, the 
              artisans, a limited military, which served it as a police and 
              sanitary corps, and so on through the usual familiar list. The 
              apparel of all classes was fashioned in the same general style, 
              until it came to the headdress--all of the people wore 
              turbans--which article of raiment differed in color according to 
              caste. ..." there was no envy of one class by 
              another.
*
THE THEN RULING EMPERIOR (they seem to 
              have been long-living, like as the old forefathers told of in the 
              bible - able to live more than ten times as long per incarnation 
              compared of today's bodies - rø):
"As antedating the reign 
              of Rai Gwauxln, attention is called to a period of time embracing 
              four thousand three hundred and forty years, inclusive of the main 
              events of Poseid history. This interval, notwithstanding its long 
              duration, had been singularly free from internecine wars, and, 
              while not wholly unmarked by martial events, was certainly more 
              peaceful than any subsequent world-epoch of equal length occurring 
              within the one hundred and twenty centuries whose lapse furnishes 
              the incidents of this history.
Gwauxln was of a long line 
              of honorable ancestors, and his house of a republican monarchial 
              system, had several times furnished successful candidates whom the 
              people had placed on the throne, during the seven centuries that 
              the present political system had ruled.
At the initial 
              date of the period referred to, the Poseidi, a powerful, numerous 
              race of mountaineers, semi-civilized at best, but of splendid 
              physique, had swept down "like the wolf " and had, in many 
              sanguinary contests, finally conquered the pastoral people 
              (nomade-folk) of the plains, the Atlantides.As time went on(after 
              many wars between the different regions), racial coalition 
              obliterated all distinctions, so that the union resulted in 
              producing earth's greatest nation
              . 
*
"Poseid came to 
              found great colonies in North and South America, and in those 
              three great remnants of Lemuria, of which Australia is but the 
              one-third left to the world by that cataclysm which sunk Atlantis; 
              also of how Atl founded certain large colonies in eastern Europe 
              at an age when there was no western Europe, and in parts of Asia 
              and Africa..."
"That day is not far off when thou wilt 
              again uncover the knowledge, so, in that time, we transmuted clay, 
              first raising its atomic speed so that it became white light of a 
              pale illuminating power and then reducing it to the, so to speak, 
              chemical "mile-post" of aluminum, and this at a cost not nearly so 
              great as in this modern day it takes to get iron from its ores. 
              The mines of native metals, as gold, silver, copper, and so on, 
              were valuable then, as now, requiring no processing save smelting. 
              But a metal which might be obtained from any ledge of slate rock, 
              or a bed of clay, was so inexpensive as to be the chief base metal 
              in use.(p86)
"..of aluminum was the giant tower of the Maxt 
              constructed. I could see its base from where I stood, an enormous 
              cube of masonry, then the superstructural round shaft of solid 
              metal of the tower proper, a dully white, tapering column, lit by 
              lunar rays. From base upward, my gaze traveled until it rested on 
              the top, an apical point nearly three thousand feet (1km) in 
              height. Entranced by this crowning triumph of the scene, I gazed 
              at the heaven-piercing shaft; sentinel over the garden city, 
              warding off the lightnings, when the lord of thunder was abroad; 
              and all my thought was of its grandeur, and its majestic 
              beauty."
*
Atl.names for america then;
Umaur and 
              Incalia, that is, South and North America.
              
*
Truly, I have said that we 
              believed in Incal, and symbolized him as the Sun-God- But the sun 
              itself was an emblem.
              
*
The Atlantides were given 
              to personification of the principles of nature and of the objects 
              of the earth, seas and skies;(p88)but this was purely a result of 
              the national love of poetry, and could be mainly traced to the 
              favor which popular fancy had accorded to a chronological epic 
              history of Poseid, wherein the chief men and women figured as 
              heroes and heroines. The powers of nature, such as wind, rain, 
              lightning, heat and cold, and all kindred phenomena were gods of 
              various degree, while the germinal principal of life, the 
              destroying one of death, and other of life's greater mysteries, 
              were characterized as the greater gods; but each and all were but 
              offspring of the Most High Incal
              *
As a fact, the worship of Incal 
              never included anything other than the adoration of God as a 
              spiritual entity, and the "gods" had no portion in the religious 
              services held on the two Sundays of each week, that is, the 
              eleventh and the first days, for with the Poseidi a week consisted 
              of eleven days, just as a month comprised three weeks, and a year 
              eleven months, with one or more "leap-year" days at its end, as 
              the exigencies of the solar calendar might require, these days 
              being a regularly recurring holiday season, as New Year's Day is 
              now.
              
*
In our monotheism we 
              differed little from the religion dominating the Hebraic 
              civilization; we recognized no divine trinity, nor any 
              Christ-spirit, neither any savior except the endeavor to do the 
              best we knew in the sight of Incal. We considered all mankind as 
              the sons of God, not any one mysteriously conceived person as 
              solely His son. Miracle was an impossible thing, for all things we 
              deemed rationally referable to uncontravenable 
              law. 
from CHAPTER VIII on: A GRAVE 
              PROPHECY
-here he mention a timeframe as he say it is the 
              last weeks in the year 11160bc.
*
. In Atla any 
              person was free to employ the morning hours even of the eleventh 
              day(as was day of rest/"sunday" ) in any manner most agreeable, 
              whether at work or playful relaxation. With the first hour, 
              however, an enormous and very sweet-toned bell pealed forth with 
              an intense, reverberant boom, two strokes, paused a moment, then 
              rang four tunes more. Thereupon all occupations ceased, and 
              religious worship commenced. On the following day the great bell 
              struck again, and throughout the length and breadth of a great 
              continent other bells pealed synchronously. It was even so in the 
              populous colonies of Umaur and Incalia, the difference in time 
              being calculated, and one man in the great temple of Incal in 
              Caiphul attended to this sweetly solemn duty. Then the season of 
              worship was over, and the rest of the Inclut (first day) was 
              devoted to recreations of every sort. This is not to be construed 
              that the worship was of a gloomy nature.
              
*
At a time some later he met 
              a strange sage that fortold much of his destiny.
"During the 
              subsequent four years after my strange meeting with the tall and 
              straight, white-haired old man who had prophesied concerning me, 
              events, one after another shaped themselves in harmony with his 
              forecast. In all that time we never met, indeed I met him but once 
              more before my death" (from first of CHAPTER IX - CURING 
              CRIME)
---
As told first of the book he discovered a ore of 
              gold and silver after the volcanic eruption he witnessed - and he 
              later divulged this to some other persons, who tried to utilize 
              this on private basis. But as all such resources was owned by the 
              public or the common, those others was later 
              judged: 
"Arrived at the Court of the Tribunes, I saw my 
              mining partners there in custody, along with the incriminated 
              purchaser of the gold. The judge of the court sat on the judicial 
              divan on its raised platform, and by his side sat, in simple 
              dignity, Gwauxln, Rai of the greatest nation of the earth; but he 
              was nevertheless studiously observant of the fact that the judge 
              was, as such, entitled to the place of first rank while in the 
              hall. Several spectators were in the seats provided for the public 
              in the auditorium". There they made a kind of psykic reading of 
              the persons character and faults/ flaws, and then the 
              cure:
"My diagnosis of the case," continued the Xioqa, 
              "having been confirmed by so high an authority, I will now apply 
              the cure."
(p99)
He summoned an attendant, who wheeled out 
              another magnetic apparatus contained in a heavy metal case. Having 
              placed this in a satisfactory condition of activity, the Xioqa 
              (ëmperor) next applied its positive pole to that place on the head 
              of the patient marked by the figure one, and the other pole he 
              placed at the back of the neck. He then took out his timepiece and 
              laid it on the metal case of the instrument, near a dial the 
              pointer of which he adjusted. All was then still, except the 
              low-toned conversation in various parts of the room, during the 
              ensuing half hour. At the end of this time the Xioqa arose from 
              his seat and changed the positive pole to the other side of the 
              head, where the duplicate figure was marked. Then again a 
              half-hour's quiet, broken only by the exit of some of the 
              spectators and the entrance of others. When the half hour had 
              again elapsed, the operator changed the pole to the place marked 
              "two." This time only half an hour was given to both sides of the 
              head. 
I had been told by the emperor to remain. He 
              bad only stayed a few moments after the beginning of the operation 
              which was not new to him. At the end of the work on the first man 
              be was taken from under the influence of the magnetic anesthetizer 
              by merely reversing the poles of the instrument at a second 
              application. The Xioqa lectured upon the theme afforded by the 
              operation while the first patient was being removed. To the 
              considerable audience that had, by this time, assembled, he 
              said:
"You have seen the treatment of those mental 
              qualities which tended through their predominance to warp his 
              moral nature, something but partially developed. The process has 
              been partially to atrophy the vascular channels supplying that 
              portion of the brain where are located the organs of greed and of 
              destruction. But mark well this point, after all is said, the soul 
              is superior to the physical brain, and it is in the soul, the 
              nature of the man, in which these criminal tendencies inhere-the 
              brain and other organs being the seat of psychic expression--the 
              business office, so to speak. Hence, merely to have mechanically 
              hypnotized this subject would not accomplish our purpose. 
              Hypnotizing is an indrawing, and the cerebral blood-vessels 
              contract and become partially bloodless; indeed, they may become 
              fatally empty; this art is a very dangerous one. But the opposite 
              effect is produced in aphaism (Poseid equivalent for the modern 
              word "mesmerism"). 
The brain is filled with blood, 
              and the reversion of the instrument cessated the hypnotic and 
              initiated the aphaic process. It is at this moment that the mind 
              of the operator may assume control of the mind of the subject, and 
              suggest to the erring soul a permanent cessation of the error. 
              This man has been so treated, doubly treated, since not only has 
              the blood supply been partially cut off which went to those organs 
              where was the seat of his weakness, but with my will I have 
              impressed his soul to cease its sin, and I have supplied it with a 
              work to execute which will have a counter action. He may be 
              slightly ill for a few days, but his tendencies to sin will be 
              gone. It requires a superior mind, which has gone wrong in several 
              directions. to make a successful evil-doer, and where the lower 
              nature, chiefly a perverted sex-nature predominates, there will be 
              found the criminal. Atla has no debauchees, for if a person show 
              such disposition, the State takes the wayward one in hand and 
              operates upon the proper organs. But I need not dilate upon these 
              subjects any further."
*
In the latter half of my 
              fourth year of attendance there came to me one Prince Menax(Menax 
              held the highest ministerial office of all the Astik, the Rai's 
              chief adviser), who desired to know whether I would accept the 
              position of Secretary of Records, a position which gave 
              opportunity to become familiar with every detail of Poseid 
              government. He took this oportunity:
"Thus I became one of the 
              seven non-official, unenfranchised secretaries, who were entrusted 
              with the writing of special reports and the care of many important 
              state documents. Surely this was no small distinction to confer on 
              one out of nine thousand Xioqeni and a man, as yet, unenfranchised 
              in a nation of three hundred million people. If, in some sort, I 
              owed it to merit, yet I was not more worthy than a hundred other 
              of my fellow-students..."
              
*
after some time the emperor 
              gave him the offer to take a trip in the vacation-period to a 
              contry on another continent:
"I was not averse to doing as 
              he desired (travel away), and as the duty took me to a land barely 
              mentioned hitherto, the account of my long-ago vacation trip may 
              be prefaced by a description of Suernis, now called 
              Hindustan(india?rø-rem.), and Necropan or Egypt, the most 
              civilized nations not under Poseid supremacy." 
              
(but a later sentence is 
              interpreted as the atlantians was some arrogant towards the 
              egypt/india-civ.):
"The differences in the two coeval 
              civilizations (atlantis(poseid) vs.egypt/india) lay in the fact, 
              that while Poseidi tended to the cultivation of the mechanical 
              arts, to sciences having to do with material things, and were 
              content to accept without question the religion of their 
              ancestors, the Suerni and Necropani paid but little heed to 
              anything not mainly occult and of religious 
              significance--practical. principles truly, occult laws having a 
              bearing on materiality--but none the less were they careless of 
              material objects except in so far as the proper maintenance of 
              life was concerned."
              
*
"We, as Poseidi, knew that 
              the mysterious nations (mentioned egypt and "india" /rø.rem) 
              across the waters were possessed of abilities which virtually 
              dwarfed our attainments, such as our power to traverse the aerial 
              or marine depths, our swift cars, our sub-surface sea ships. No, 
              they did not boast such conveniences, but they had no need of them 
              to carry on the course of their lives and, therefore, as we 
              supposed, no desire for such apparatus. Perhaps our scorn was more 
              affected than real, for in our more sober thought we acknowledged, 
              with no small admiration, their supremacy."
              
*
"Of what use our 
              instruments of war even against such a people, a single man of 
              whom, looking with eyes wherein glittered the terrible light of a 
              will power exerted to hurl in retribution the unseen forces of the 
              Night-Side, could cause our foemen to wither as green leaves 
              before the hot breath of fire?" p108
"Were missiles of value 
              here? Of use, when the person at whom they were aimed could arrest 
              them in their lightning path, and make them fall as thistle-down 
              at his feet? What, even, was the value of explosives, more awful 
              than nitroglycerin, dropped from vailx poised miles above in the 
              blue vault of heaven? None whatever; for the enemy, with prescient 
              gaze and perfect control of Night-Side forces we knew not of, 
              could arrest the falling destroyer, and instead of suffering harm 
              could annihilate that high ship and its living load. A burned 
              child fears the fire, and in times past we bad sought to conquer 
              these nations, and failed disastrously. Repulse was all they 
              sought to effect, and successful over us in this, we had been left 
              to go in peace."
              
*
"Atla had learned at last 
              so much of the secret as to wield magnetic forces for the 
              destruction of its foes, and had dispensed with missiles, 
              projectiles, and explosives as agents of defense. But the 
              knowledge of the Suerni (todays india?) was still greater. Greater 
              because our magnetic destroyers spread death only over restricted 
              areas circumjacent to the operator; theirs operated at any desired 
              point, however distant. Ours struck indiscriminately at all things 
              in the fated district; at things inanimate, as well as animate; at 
              men, whether foes or friends; at animals, at trees--all were 
              doomed. Their agencies went out under control, and struck at the 
              heart of the opposing force, not destroying life unnecessarily; 
              nor even molesting any of the enemy except the generals and 
              directors of their forces.
Prince Menax asked me that I 
              oblige (gjøre den tjenesten) him by going on a mission to that 
              people. I had never seen the land of Suern and, having a desire to 
              do so, felt well pleased that it was to be 
              gratified."
*
Some later in the palace, is told of a far 
              warcampaign from the atlantians againt the Suerni/india - where 
              the atl.army was beaten only by the magical use of the Suerni king 
              - who made every man in the attacing army fell to ground - as 
              their hearts stopped beating by magic 
              invocation.